FALL RIVER — Prosecutors and defense attorneys agreed Monday that a ballistics expert for Aaron Hernandez’s defense team will examine the evidence in the Odin Lloyd murder investigation.

The ballistics evidence includes bullet fragments and .45-caliber shell casings found near Lloyd’s body in the North Attleborough Industrial Park, as well as a shell casing found in a rental vehicle that Hernandez, 24, the former Patriots tight end, and his two alleged associates are said to have driven on the night of Lloyd’s murder.

During a brief motion hearing Monday, Superior Court Judge E. Susan Garsh also took under advisement defense lawyers’ request to suppress evidence — home surveillance footage, two cellphones and three iPad tablets — taken from Hernandez’s North Attleborough home in June 2013.

Garsh also rescheduled a motion hearing where the defense team is expected to argue for a change of trial venue. The hearing will be held Oct. 30 in Fall River Superior Court.

Hernandez appeared during Monday’s brief hearing in Fall River. Prosecutors allege he orchestrated Lloyd’s murder on June 17, 2013, after a disagreement they had at a Boston nightclub two nights earlier. Hernandez, who is charged with murder and firearms offenses, is being held without bail at a Suffolk County jail.

Hernandez’s cousin, Tanya Singleton, 38, is scheduled to appear Tuesday in Fall River Superior Court, where she is expected to plead guilty to a criminal contempt charge after having allegedly refused to testify before a Bristol County grand jury that heard evidence last summer in Lloyd’s slaying. Last week, Singleton’s lawyer requested, in a presentencing memorandum, that Garsh order Singleton to serve a one-year suspended sentence under home confinement while she undergoes treatment for her aggressive breast cancer.

On Monday, prosecutors filed a presentencing memorandum wherein they asked that Singleton be placed on probation for two years and confined to her home with GPS monitoring because they could not determine that her cancer treatment regimen could adequately continue in jail, according to court documents.

However, prosecutors also said Singleton’s refusal to testify at the grand jury was “deliberate” and “designed to hinder the prosecution of the murder of Odin Lloyd.” Prosecutors said Singleton defiantly used profanity when telling alleged murder accomplice Ernest Wallace that she would not testify at the grand jury.

“This type of response does not stem from familial love but instead uses the common understanding of family as a cynical justification for lawlessness,” prosecutors wrote.

Singleton is still facing a charge of conspiracy to commit accessory after the fact. Prosecutors say she tried to help Wallace and Carlos Ortiz, another alleged murder accomplice, flee Massachusetts when police began investigating Lloyd’s murder.